Daily Mail

No job... but lured into bags of debt

A ‘buy now, pay later’ crackdown was promised months ago. But our poll reveals it will be far too late for many of Britain’s poorest

- By Fiona Parker and Helena Kelly f.parker@dailymail.co.uk

ONE in ten shoppers who used controvers­ial ‘buy now, pay later’ services are unemployed and dependent on benefits, a Money Mail poll reveals today. our survey also found that only half of those who used the checkout lending service were full-time employees.

The poll raises questions over how responsibl­y the loans are dished out to shoppers who perhaps cannot afford to repay them.

It comes as experts fear a generation could damage their financial futures while the Government drags its heels on regulation.

The Treasury announced in February that ‘buy now, pay later’ (BNPL) lenders such as Klarna, Clearpay and Laybuy, would be regulated to better protect spenders.

At the time, Christophe­r woolard, former interim chief executive of the Financial Conduct Authority, said it was ‘urgently needed to protect consumers’. But seven months on, no plans, timelines or proposals have been announced.

In the meantime, Citizens Advice has revealed as many as one in ten BNPL customers has been chased by debt collectors after missing payments.

And the charity’s research suggests that shoppers have been charged as much as £39 million in late fees over the past year.

Concerns have been rising about the lenders — prompting demands for regulation by the City watchdog and campaigner­s.

our poll, conducted by Consumer Intelligen­ce, revealed that more than one in 20 borrowers had spent more than £1,000 in a single month. Around half admitted to buying something they did not need.

THE sector has continued to grow at a galloping pace since ministers pledged to regulate it. Klarna has more than 15 million UK customers and more than 250,000 retailers on its books.

Klarna, Clearpay, Laybuy all employ debt collectors as a last resort to chase customers who miss payments.

However, when Citizens Advice surveyed checkouts on leading retailers’ websites, not one warned customers this could happen.

Money Mail has also seen a growing number of young people posting videos online about their BNPL habits.

on social media site TikTok, Chloe Byrnes, 21, warns: ‘If the tempting feeling of “buy now, pay later” is running through your bones right now . . . pack it in.’

Broadcasti­ng to 22,300 people, she says that £200 left her account as soon as her student loan arrived

after staggering payments for an Apple Macbook.

In the video, she says: ‘Have I learnt from my mistakes? Absolutely not, because I’ve just placed an ASoS order.’

Myron Jobson, personal finance campaigner at wealth platform

Interactiv­e Investor, says: ‘The explosion of this form of lending underlines the importance of financial education from a young age.’

Stella Creasy, the Labour MP for walthamsto­w, says: ‘Millions are getting into debt using BNPL to make ends meet without any protection — there can be no excuse for this delay and the Chancellor must intervene.’

Aspiring homeowners have been refused loans after lenders have spotted BNPL companies on their bank statements.

And as many as two million shoppers were thought to have damaged their credit scores through the services by January last year, according to consumer group which?.

Klarna and Clearpay say they have never reported on shoppers’ credit files if they have missed payments on their BNPL products.

Spokesmen for lenders Klarna, Laybuy and Clearpay all say that they fully support the regulation of the sector.

Alex Marsh, of Klarna UK, says: ‘our BNPL products are interestan­d fee-free and are designed to keep people out of debt with clear upfront payment plans.’

Gary Rohloff, of Laybuy, says it conducts hard credit checks on customers and has always worked with credit reference agencies.

A Clearpay spokesman says: ‘Customer protection is at the core of our service, with no interest, accounts frozen at the first sign of mispayment and our revenue generated from the merchant.’

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